On February 26 of this year, the motions judge for the week denied the requests of Priests for Life, Life Legal Defense Foundation, and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference for permission to file amicus curiae briefs in support of the appellants. Reconsideration of the judge’s order was twice sought by one of the appellants, the second time urging that a three-judge panel consider the requests even though the court has, pursuant to Fed. R.App. P. 27(c), delegated the decision of such requests to a single judge, the motions judge for the week in which the request is filed. 7th Cir. Operating Proc. 1(a)(1). The requests were, however, referred to the entire motions panel, and by it denied, and we have decided to issue an opinion explaining our denial in the hope of clarifying the court’s standards for amicus curiae briefs.
Whether to permit a nonparty to submit a brief, as amicus curiae, is, with immaterial exceptions, a matter of judicial grace. Fed.R.App.P. 29(a);
United States v. Michigan,
1. We court of appeals judges have heavy caseloads requiring us to> read thousands of pages of briefs annually, and we wish to minimize extraneous reading. It would not be responsible for us to permit the filing of a brief and then not read it (or at least glance at it, or require our law clerks to read it), at least when permission is granted before the brief is written, and so reliance on our reading it invited. Therefore ami-cus curiae briefs can be a real burden on the court system. In addition, the filing of an amicus brief imposes a burden of study and the preparation of a possible response on the parties.
*617 2. Amicus curiae briefs, which we believe though without having proof are more often than not sponsored or encouraged by one or more of the parties in the cases in which they are sought to be filed, may be intended to circumvent the page limitations on the parties’ briefs, to the prejudice of any party who does not have an amicus ally. The lawyer for one of the would-be amici curiae in this case admits that he was paid by one of the appellants for his preparation of the amicus curiae brief. And that appellant comes close to admitting that its support of the requests to file amicus briefs is a response to our having denied the appellant’s motion to file an oversized brief.
3. Amicus curiae briefs are often attempts to inject interest-group politics into the federal appellate process by flaunting the interest of a trade association or other interest group in the outcome of the appeal.
The policy of this court is, therefore, not to grant rote permission to file an amicus curiae brief; never to grant permission to file an amicus curiae brief that essentially merely duplicates the brief of one of the parties (for a particularly egregious example of such an amicus brief, see
United States v. Gotti,
These requests for leave to file amicus curiae briefs were therefore properly denied.
